The Mayor's Office for Policing and Crime and Metropolitan Police

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The Mayor's Office for Policing and Crime and Metropolitan Police The Mayor’s Office for Policing and Crime and Metropolitan Police Service Public Access and Engagement Strategy Draft Strategy for Consultation July 2017 Page 19 Foreword Our first priority is keeping Londoners safe. That means tackling the things that matter most to communities - terrorism, knife and gun crime, hate crime, sexual offending, domestic violence and protecting vulnerable people from predatory behaviour. We can have more impact on keeping people safe if we mobilise communities and involve local people in improving public safety and preventing crime. That means improving the way we engage with London’s communities and changing the ways people can access our services to meet changes in the public’s expectations. The backdrop to these ambitions is a prolonged period of reductions in funding for policing in London. On top of the £600 million already saved from the MPS budget, London’s police now need to deliver a further £400 million of savings over the next four years. £200 million of these have been identified, but a further £200 million still need to be found. Tackling this financial challenge forces us to make some tough choices, some of which are set out in this document. We are determined that choices made to deliver savings will, wherever possible, protect the front line and improve our response to the public, and that is the intention behind the plans set out in this document. In fact, in many cases, we believe we can replace a current offer which does not meet Londoners’ needs with a new one which is more suited to the way they want to engage with their public services. Our investment in front line policing, and the equipment needed for a 21st century police force, is made possible by selling expensive to run buildings – many of which only support back-office activity – which are underused or no longer needed. But as well as this specific pressure to make savings, we will always have a duty to direct resources to those things that matter most to Londoners. With new emerging crime types to respond to, such as cyber-crime; vulnerable victims of child sexual exploitation, rape and domestic abuse to protect; and violent crime, particularly involving knives, rising, we must target our resources where they can do the most good. Only by diverting resources from places where they are no longer needed or used can we protect the front line in this way and deliver the greatest bang for Londoners’ buck. While the direction of travel is broadly settled, this document asks a number of questions, particularly about how we should improve public engagement, and we look forward to hearing from Londoners in the coming weeks and months. Sophie Linden, Deputy Mayor for Policing and Crime Cressida Dick, Commissioner of the Metropolitan Police Service Page 2 Page 20 Introduction The way that the public want to access services is changing. From shopping to banking through to booking NHS appointments or engaging with council services, people expect convenience and choice. Yet, as society has digitised, policing has continued to rely heavily on analogue ways to access services and engage with the officers who keep us safe. The police have a long history of embracing new technology to improve the service they provide. From the telephone to the handheld radio, from cars to the latest body worn video technology, policing has innovated effectively to take advantage of new technology and respond to the changes in the society they serve, but the pace of that innovation needs to increase so that we are offering the best service to Londoners in the fast-moving digital age. This draft strategy sets out the current state of public access and engagement and where we want to get to. Our public access offer to Londoners brings together new online ways of reporting, more Dedicated Ward Officers in every community, based closer to their wards and equipped to work and engage with the public on the go and at notified times and places, and one 24/7 front counter in every borough. It is because we know from recent surveys that Londoners value and prioritise local neighbourhood policing that we are diverting resources from poorly used and expensive to run facilities to support the front line. In the context of increasing demand and reducing budgets, choices like these are inevitable, but we are committed to delivering a high-quality, responsive service for Londoners. At the same time, the changes to the digital service mean a better, more convenient victim-focused service will be offered. The changes we make to increase the range of opportunities to access the police will allow us to reinvigorate how we do community engagement. Central to this is the role of Dedicated Ward Officers, who will have a specific responsibility to engage with the community they police. The number of Dedicated Ward Officers is being increased, and new technology will make them more efficient and effective as well as - crucially - more accessible. The local connection that new Dedicated Ward Officers will give us will allow us to close the failed Contact Points, and expensive to run safer neighbourhood bases which will be replaced with hubs much closer to the communities they police. Our approach to community engagement will be built around our commitment to every community that we will inform them about policing activity and issue in their area, reassure them when they are worried about things or in response to specific events, and empower them to get involved in making decision about policing in their local community. Page 3 Page 21 The introduction of new online systems, individual ward webpages and social media for officers means that people will be able to follow and engage with MPS activity in an unprecedented way. And for those who are not online the traditional engagement through Ward Panels, Safer Neighbourhood Boards and other formal structures will continue and be improved. No change is entirely easy, or universally popular, but the totality of the offer to the public in this document represents a necessary and positive change for London. We are collectively committed to delivering policing where and when Londoners need it, engaging with Londoners in effective and convenient ways and giving people the opportunity to access policing services in a wide range of methods. We will always prioritise better equipped, mobile front line officers over expensive, underused buildings. Page 4 Page 22 This draft strategy asks a series of questions for local people and partners to consider. Anyone wishing to respond to the questions in this document, or any other issue relating to public access and engagement should do so by visiting www. London.gov.uk/public-access or emailing [email protected] or in writing to: Public Access Consultation MOPAC City Hall The Queen’s Walk London SE1 2AA Responses will be received until 5.30pm on 6 October 2017. The Metropolitan Police Service will be holding public briefing sessions in every London Borough so that local people can learn about the changes contained in this document and can give their views. The principle questions we would like Londoners to engage with are: 1. To what extent do you agree that the Metropolitan Police Service should improve its current online offer to the public? 2. After reading the draft strategy document, do any partners or other community members have suggestions for possible suitable locations for new Dedicated Ward Officer hubs? 3. Community Contact Sessions are designed to free up officer time and meet the needs of individual communities across London. To what extent do you agree that existing Contact Points should be replaced with Community Contact Sessions? 4. Do you have any suggestions for how Community Contact Sessions could best meet the needs of your community? 5. To what extent do you agree that flexible opportunities to contact police officers (e.g. Community Contact Sessions) are a suitable alternative to accessing the police via a front counter? 6. Please include any further comments - about flexible opportunities to contact police officers as an alternative to accessing the police via a front counter. 7. It is proposed some front counter locations are swapped across London, in order to maximise savings and capital receipts. To what extent do you agree that the following changes should take place? 8. After reading the draft strategy document, should we consider low-cost alternatives to front counters for communities over 45 minutes from their nearest front counter? What options should we consider? 9. How can we ensure that hard to reach communities are identified and their voices actively sought on London-wide and Borough-level policing issues? 10. How can MOPAC better enable local communities to be more aware of, Page 5 Page 23 and involved, in the work of the local Independent Advisory Groups, Safer Neighbourhood Boards, Independent Custody Visiting and Community Monitoring Groups? 11. How can the Metropolitan Police’s community engagement complement and work more closely with the public engagement by local authorities? 12. What type of information should be shared by the police to help communities feel informed about policing and crime in their area? 13. What type of information should be shared by the police to help communities protect themselves from crime and anti-social behaviour? By what delivery method should this information be shared? Are there new digital or innovative methods that should be trialled? 14. How should the police reassure the public about crime trends and be a trusted source of facts, particularly on social media? 15. How can communities be reassured about real-time events or trends in their area? 16.
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